STOCKBRIDGE — It’s an election year, so perennial presidential candidate and MAD magazine cover boy, Alfred E. Neuman, has once again thrown his hat in the proverbial ring. The imp-faced redhead has ...
(JTA) — STOCKBRIDGE, Massachusetts — There’s a delightful “what if” moment at the start of “What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine,” a new exhibit at the Norman Rockwell Museum here. In ...
The Rockwell/MAD interaction may be unexpected — but not, as it turns out, a case of museum matter meeting magazine anti-matter STOCKBRIDGE — Norman Rockwell has a cherished place in the American ...
If you giggled sitting on your bunk at summer camp reading Spy v. Spy in MAD Magazine as a kid, this summer, the Norman Rockwell Museum will be a place you won’t want to miss. They are featuring the ...
It’s been said that holding the office of the U.S. presidency ages a person. One look at before-and-after photos of Barack Obama is proof: his hair went white overnight. Let me add that electing a ...
Nestled the rolling hills of rural Massachusetts. swathed by manicured grounds, sits the Norman Rockwell Museum. And there, side-by-side with the wholesome works of America's most beloved illustrator, ...
Norman Rockwell Museum recently opened a landmark retrospective exploring the art, satire, and cultural impact of MAD Magazine, one of the longest-running humor publications in America.
The Norman Rockwell Museum show about the influential humor magazine presents a merger of two sensibilities: gentle and crude, rural and urban — and gentile and Jewish. STOCKBRIDGE, Massachusetts — ...